This step was remarkable, because monkeys do not posses the cones to see red, prompting the question of what the monkeys were actually seeing.

Further research revealed that color wavelengths do not have predetermined perceptions attached to them, meaning our brains are not set to respond to colors in the same way.

However, although we may not perceive colors as the same as others, colors do prompt the same emotional reactions from us. In other words, no matter how we perceive the "blue" of the ocean, the color's shorter wavelengths makes us feel calm, says Wolchover.

This research is groundbreaking not only because it holds promise for the restoration of full sight to color blind patients, it also has major philosophical ramifications for how the world is perceived.

Although this information is still very new, it has those in the science community very excited. Joseph Carrol of the Medical College of Wisconsin told Life's Little Mysteries, "I think we can say for certain that people don't see the same colors."